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It is hoped, however, that the completeness of the Index, both as to subje persons, and parties, will enable all, without difficulty, to command ready acc to the multitude of facts which will be found in these pages.

Part I contains a full statement of the Orders and Proclamations and 1 general action of President JOHNSON, in the development of his policy of rest ing the insurrectionary States to their places in the Union, by calling consti tional conventions in each, on an indicated basis, and by suggesting cert action therein as preliminary to restoration. It also contains the legislati of those organizations respecting the colored population recently freed, and 1 various Messages, Speeches, Letters, and Proclamations of the PRESIDENT vindication of his policy and in resistance to that of Congress. This part v also be found to contain the full text of the majority and minority repo of the Joint Congressional Committee on Reconstruction, with the text the Fourteenth Amendment, as finally adopted by Congress and submitt to the Legislatures for their action. This amendment having been reject by the Legislatures in the insurrectionary States, chosen under the acti of President JOHNSON, Congress subsequently adopted the decisive measure dividing those States into five Military Districts, providing for their re-orga ization on the basis of, substantially, Universal Manhood Suffrage, and p scribing the conditions on which they would be entitled to representation Congress.

Part II contains the texts of these various measures, the Veto Messages the PRESIDENT in disapproval of them, and the various Votes by which th were passed over the veto by two-thirds of each House.

Part III contains all the proceedings connected with the proposed impeac ment of President JOHNSON by the Fortieth Congress, with the Articles Impeachment in full, the answer of President JoHNSON, the Replication of t House, and the Judgment of the Senate thereon. It also contains a digest the Orders of the Military Commanders and their general action under t various Reconstruction acts, with an abstract of the Constitutions prepared the Conventions called under them.

Parts IV and V contain the remaining record of Reconstruction, the fir votes in Congress upon the adoption of the Fifteenth Constitutional Amer ment, President GRANT's action thereon, the votes of the various State Legis tures, and the final certificate of the Secretary of State announcing its ratificati as an amendment to the Constitution. Besides these great measures, the inter in which will scarcely abate as long as our present system of governme remains, in this volume will be found all the Decisions of the Supreme Court the United States during this period, on the more important public questio which came before it, such as the Habeas Corpus, the Legal-Tender, and the Te Oath cases; the right of States to tax National Banks; the right of the Unit

States to tax State Banks; the right of a State to tax persons passing through it; the validity of contracts in confederate money, and the effect of express contracts to pay coined dollars; and sundry opinions in United States Circuit and State courts. Besides, in it will be found all the votes in Congress upon general questions, such as the Public Credit act, Banking and Currency legislation, the Tenure-of-Office act, the Civil Rights act, Internal Revenue, Tariff, and Landgrant legislation; the various Messages, Proclamations, and Orders of Presidents JOHNSON and GRANT; the votes of Congress on political declaratory resolutions; the platforms of parties, both State and National, from 1866 to 1870; the returns of State and Presidential elections; Tables of Population, Public Debt, Landgrants, Taxation, Registration, Disfranchisement, Expenditures and Appropriations, Revenue receipts and reductions, Lists of the Cabinets of Presidents JOHNSON and GRANT, and of the Members of the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses; and an extended political and military miscellany, which will be found to include almost every thing of permanent interest connected with national politics during the period referred to.

This volume takes up the thread where it was dropped by that on the Rebellion, and it is naturally a companion to it. That gives the record of the steps by which Secession was accomplished and Disunion attempted, as well as of those by which Secession was resisted and Disunion defeated. This gives the equally portentous record of the means by which, the War over, the Government and people of the United States reaped its fruits, and especially the memorable steps by which four millions of slaves, formerly knows as chattels, became incorporated, first into the civil, and next into the political, body.

In the various votes given, the names of Republicans are printed in Roman, of Democrats, and of those who generally co-operated with them, in italic. EDWARD MCPHERSON.

WASHINGTON, D. C., April 20, 1871.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

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XV. President Johnson's Messages............143-181
Annual Message, December 5, 1866-Veto of
the Second Freedmen's Bureau Bill, with copy
and votes-Respecting Restoring Tennessee
to her Relations to the Union-Veto of the
District of Columbia Suffrage Bill, with copy
and votes-Veto of the Second Colorado Bill,
with copy and votes-Veto of the Nebraska
Bill, with copy and votes-Veto of the Recon-
struction Bill, with copy and votes-Veto of
the Tenure-of-Office Act, with copy and votes-
Accompanying the Approval of the Army Ap-
propriation Bill-Veto of the Supplementary
Reconstruction Bill, with copy and votes-Ac-
companying the Approval of a Reconstruction
Appropriation Bill.

XVI. Members of the Cabinet of President
Johnson, and of the Second Session of the
39th Congress, and First Session of 40th
Congress, and of Claimants of Seats
therein..
...................................181-183

XVIII. Text of the Reconstruction Meas-
ures of 39th and 40th Congresses......191-194
Fourteenth Constitutional Amendment-Re-

XIX. Proclamations and Orders...............194-208

President Johnson's Proclamations on the Re-
establishment of Civil Authority, on American
Vessels in certain Ports of Japan, respecting
Decree of Maximilian, respecting Vessels of
the Hawaiian Islands, and declaring Nebraska
a State; his Orders withdrawing the Reward
for the Arrest of John H. Surratt, and Release
of Convicts; his Telegrams to Provisional
Governor Throckmorton of Texas, Governor
Brownlow of Tennessee, and Montgomery
Blair-General, Grant's Order Revoking Order
Respecting Disloyal Newspapers-Assigning
Commanders to Military Districts under Re-
construction Bill-Various Orders of said Com-
manders-Governor Brownlow's Proclamation
respecting a State Guard.

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XXVI. Letters, Papers, Testimony, Politico-

Military Orders, and Report of General

Grant.
.....293-316

General Grant's Orders respecting Slaves, is-

sued in the Field-Letters on Slavery and

Reconstruction; on being a Candidate for Po-

litical Office; on Results of "Peace on any

Terms;" on Filling the Armies; on Protecting
Colored Soldiers-His Testimony on the Ex-
change of Prisoners-Documents on the Pro-
posed Mission to Mexico-On the Baltimore
Troubles of 1866-On Martial Law in Texas-
Testimony on Reconstruction-Letters on
the Removal of General Sheridan and Sec-
retary Stanton-His Orders and Telegrams
-to Miliitary Commanders in the Unrecon-
structed States-Report as Secretary of War
ad interim.

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